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Making all t Lincoln NEBRASKA Business Services & Information Technology Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development 1135 M Street, Suite 200 Lincoln, NE 68508 402.436.2350 www.selectLINCOLN.org A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICES AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INDUSTRY CLUSTER

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Making all the difference for business.

LincolnN E B R A S K A

Business Services & Information Technology

Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development1135 M Street, Suite 200

Lincoln, NE 68508402.436.2350

www.selectLINCOLN.org

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICES AND

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INDUSTRY CLUSTER

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

INTRODUCTION

This fast growing business services and information technology sectors are well matched to the Lincoln, Ne-braska economy. Business services is comprised of financial and insurance services, business services such as consulting and web development, back-office support operations including record-keeping duties, accounting and payroll services, and even customer support, and processing facilities, including data centers. The informa-tion technology sector encompasses computer programming services, prepackaged software, data process-ing, information retrieval services, website hosting, internet search, computer systems design, and telecommuni-cations. Such industries benefit from Lincoln’s highly educated workforce, low labor costs, low cost of living, low traffic congestion costs, and business-friendly environment.

WHY LINCOLN?

Lincoln, a centrally-located community of 300,000, is well positioned to cultivate this industry through its highly educated workforce1, existing advanced manufacturing technology presence, extensive university research and outstanding quality of life.

Lincoln offers the ambiance of a friendly small town and the amenities, attractions and entertainment opportunities of a major metropolitan area. Lincoln is both the state capital and home to the flagship campus of the University of Nebraska; as a result it provides a greater range of offerings than might be in a community of its size. Efficient transportation, a stable business environment, advanced health-care technology and an excellent educational system are just a few of the reasons why Lincoln ranks highly in livability studies. As described in the pages that follow, Lincoln has significant cost advantages in terms of cost-of-living, wages, space costs, and other business costs. The University of Nebraska-Lincoln provides research services while colleges throughout the region graduate student in relevant majors for the advanced manufacturing industry. Lincoln also has an established cluster of advanced manufacturing firms.

1 Source: U.S. Bureau of Census, “American Community Survey.”

EDUCATION ATTAINMENT, AGE 25 AND OVER,LINCOLN METROPOLITAN AREA, 2007-2009

7%

24% 23%

34%

12%

Non-Graduate High SchoolGraduate

Some College,No Degree

Associate or Bachelor’s

Degree

Graduate or Professional

Degree

1UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

COST COMPARISONS

Lincoln’s cost of living compares favorably with comparison metropolitan areas nationwide. 2

2

In addition to Lincoln’s exceptional amenities and educated workforce, Lincoln has nearly the lowest cost industrial space among peer metropolitan areas.3 These particular rent costs refer to building space especially well suited to the business services and information technology industry.

Charlotte

Lincoln

Des Moines

COST OF LIVING COMPOSITE INDEX, Q2 2011

San Francisco

Boston

Seattle

Base = 100, National Average

166.0137.5

116.194.0 93.3 90.4

2 Source: Council for Community and Economic Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development 3 Source: NAI Global, http://naidirect.com/mr.aspxNote: Class A downtown office space effective average not available for Des Moines, IA. Rent for San Jose, CA and Seattle, WA is for the 4th Quarter, 2009, which is the most recent available data.UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

ANNUAL RENT PER SQUARE FOOT:CLASS A DOWNTOWN OFFICE SPACE, EFFECTIVE

AVERAGE, 4TH QUARTER 2010

$43.44

San Jose

San Francisco

Charlotte

Seattle

Lincoln

Boston

$42.00$28.36 $26.00 $23.00

$15.41

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

Lincoln also ranks amongst the lowest with regard to relative wage costs.4 This completes a perfect combination of unique amenities, low cost of living, and an attractive business environment through a highly educated work-force, and low costs of commercial space and employment.

RELATIVE WAGES FOR PROFESSIONAL & RELATED WORKERS, 2010

Boston

Seattle

Charlotte

San Jose- San Francisco-

Oakland, CA

Lincoln

120111

109

9784

Base = 100, National Average

We provide detailed salary information on several business services and information technology occupations on the next page. Cost comparisons for workers compensation costs, average unemployment insurance tax rate on taxable wages, industrial gas average price per Btu, commercial service average price per kilowatt, top state corporate income tax rate, and right to work can be found on page 5. Lincoln is one of the three lowest cost metro areas among comparison cities for energy costs, corporate tax rates, workers’ compensation rates, and unemployment insurance rates.

4Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Note: Relative wage information unavailable for Des Moines, IA. Wage data available on a combined basis for S.F. and S.J.

UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development 3

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

3 4

AVERAGE ANNUAL SALARY, LINCOLN MSA, 2011 (MAY)

ENTRY EXPERIENCE MEANTOTAL ALL OCCUPATIONS $18,903 $50,316 $39,845

MANAGEMENT OCCUPATIONS $48,396 $112,545 $91,161Computer And Information Systems Managers $66,508 $107,160 $93,610

BUSINESS AND FINANCIAL SERVICES OCCUPATIONS $36,474 $68,498 $57,823Financial analysts $41,584 $69,420 $60,141Management Analysts $39,165 $71,138 $60,481Market research analysts $31,250 $63,001 $52,417

COMPUTER AND MATHEMATICAL OCCUPATIONS $37,058 $66,976 $57,004Computer Programmers $35,551 $71,067 $59,228Computer Systems Analysts $44,318 $69,857 $61,344Database Administrators $41,429 $74,116 $63,221Network And Computer Systems Administrators $38,244 $68,050 $58,115Software Developers, Applications $41,738 $69,566 $60,290Software Developers, Systems Software $43,402 $74,189 $63,927

OFFICE AND ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT WORKERS $19,339 $35,591 $30,173Computer Operators $24,784 $36,420 $32,541Data Entry Keyers $20,012 $27,653 $25,106

ANNUAL SALARY

UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

SELECTED BUSINESS COSTS FOR BUSINESS SERVICES AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INDUSTRY(THREE LOWEST COST METRO AREAS LISTED IN BOLD)

5UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

Metropolitan Area1

WorkersCompensationcosts per $100 of ManufacturingPayroll 2009(State Average)

AverageUnemploymentInsurance TaxRate on TaxableWages 2009(State Average)

Right-to-Work State?

Lincoln $3.53 1.3% Yes

Boston $2.36 3.6% No

Charlotte $3.54 1.7% Yes

Des Moines $3.29 1.5% Yes

San Francisco $6.28 4.2% No

San Jose $6.28 4.2% No

Seattle NA 1.4% No

1For metropolitan areas located in multiple states (Charlotte), we utilize state averages from the state where the metropolitan areas’ economic activity is concentrated (North Carolina).

2Tax that may be eligable for use for credits earned in state incentive program.

Sources: Tax Foundation for corporate tax rates, Lincoln Electric System for industrial electric service rates, and Nebraska Department of Economic Development for workers’ compensation costs, unemployment insurance rates, average natural gas prices, and right-to-work.

UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development 6

SELECTED BUSINESS COSTS FOR BUSINESS SERVICES AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INDUSTRY (THREE LOWEST COST METRO AREAS LISTED IN BOLD)

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

Metropolitan Area1

Average Price Industrial Gas/ Million Btu2009(State Average)

Average Price/KWH CommercialService, Jan 2011 (City)

40KW, 500KW, 14mWh 150mWh

Top StateCorporate Income2

Tax Rate 2011

Lincoln $5.84 $0.058 $0.080 7.81%

Boston $11.72 $0.143 $0.149 8.25%

Charlotte $8.41 $0.070 $0.067 6.9%

Des Moines $6.05 $0.063 $0.054 12%

San Francisco $6.38 $0.133 $0.124 8.84%

San Jose $6.38 NA NA 8.84%

Seattle $11.38 $0.068 $0.061 0%

EDUCATION RESOURCES

Lincoln’s Business Services and Information Technology sector benefits from the vast array of programs that sup-port the development of a specialized workforce for this industry.

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL), Peru State, Concordia University, Southeast Community College, and Doane College all provide business management, administration, accounting and finance programs. In ad-dition to which there are a number of programs and other institutions tailored to the information technology needs of the sector. While UNL is certainly the backbone of information technology research and education in Lincoln, there are many institutions that offer 2-year and 4-year degree programs in this field: Concordia College, Doane College, Kaplan University, Nebraska Institute of Technology, Nebraska Wesleyan University, Southeast Community College, and Union College. Lincoln is also home to numerous other private institutions that offer certification programs in IT, two of these are the New Horizons Computer Learning Center and Easel Solutions.

7UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

In 2010 alone, the colleges and universities in Lincoln graduate over 1,000 students with bachelor’sdegrees in majors related to this sector, another almost 300 with associate’s degrees, and nearly 250with post-graduate degrees.

8

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

Bachelor’s DegreesAwarded

ConcordiaUniversity

DoaneCollege

KaplanUniversity

NebraskaWesleyanUniversity

PeruState

SoutheastCommunityCollege

UnionCollege

UNL

Accounting 4 32 4 7 97Actuarial Science 24Business Administration and Management,General

Business/Commerce, General 95 24 118 198 21 201Business/Managerial Economics 18Computer Engineering, General 36Computer and Information Sciences andSupport Services

2 5 14 40 7 31

Electrical, Electronics and CommunicationsEngineering

60 50

Finance, General 60 50Human Resources Management/PersonnelAdministration, General

45

International Business/Trade/Commerce 2 0 21

Management Science, General 55Marketing/Marketing Management, General 109

A: Associates Degrees

Post-Graduate DegreesAwarded

DoaneCollege

UNL

Accounting 33Actuarial Science 8Business Administration and Management,General

101

Business, Management, Marketing & Related Support Services, Other 21

Computer and Information Sciences, General 16

Electrical, Electronics and Communications Engineering 5

Management Science, General 59Marketing Research 9Telecommunications Technology/Technician 6

Source: http://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/

UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

9UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

RESEARCH AND INDUSTRY SERVICES

The business services and information technology sectors also benefit from research programs at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL). UNL’s extensive business services and information technology research program and infrastructure include:

Jeffrey S. Raikes School of Computer Science and ManagementAn innovative integration of computer science and management education, including a 2-year applied software design studio. The Jeffrey S. Raikes School develops leaders for a technology driven world. It is the recognized leader in interdisciplinary computer science and business management education for high ability and highly motivated students. The Raikes School is unique in that it is the premier program bringing together the domain of computer science and information technology with business, thereby developing leaders and entrepreneurs for the increasingly information technology-driven business world.

The Design Studio is the capstone learning experience of the Jeffrey S. Raikes School. In Design Studio, student teams partner with sponsoring businesses and government agencies to develop real-world, software-based solutions meeting their client's needs. Students gain project management, teamwork, and leadership skills es-sential in today's professional world. Design Studio gives students and clients the ability to interact and create innovative software based solution, while benefiting from the support of Raikes School faculty and facilities.

For more information, see the source of this passage: http://raikes.unl.edu/

College of Business Administration (CBA)The CBA currently ranks among the top 12% of the small percentage of the schools offering undergraduate or graduate programs in business administration that are accredited under the high standards set by the Associa-tion to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB). The college has maintained such a high ranking by fostering intellectual curiosity, business insight, and effective leadership through high quality instruction, re-search, and service to students, the citizens of Nebraska, and national and international communities.The CBA is the second largest college on the University of Nebraska-Lincoln campus with approximately 3,000 students attending classes with 62 full-time faculty members. The undergraduate program offers nine majors; accounting, actuarial science, agribusiness, business administration, economics, finance, international business, management, and marketing. Masters and doctoral degrees are offered by the five departments; accounting, economics, finance, management and marketing.

The College retains close ties with professional and business leaders. Executives from all around the world come into the classrooms to speak to students and student organizations. Companies visit the college regularly to meet with faculty, attend job fairs, and forge closer ties with the College. Many student organizations are closely affiliated with professional and business organizations in the community. The College is also home to the Center for Entrepreneurship, which was named best in the nation by the U.S. Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship.

For more information, see the source of this passage: http://cba.unl.edu/

10

Department of Computer Science & EngineeringGraduates from this UNL department are highly capable, creative individuals whose skills allow them to work seamlessly across a broad spectrum of careers. The department graduates 30 students with Bachelors degrees, and another 25 students with graduate degrees every year. The department also conducts state-of-the-art research in software engineering, informatics, and systems. The faculty receives funding from a variety of sources including: National Science Foundation (NSF), U.S. Department of Agriculture, Army Research Office, Airforce Office of Scientific Research, NASA, National Institute of Health, Microsoft, and Intel.

The department also hosts a number of research labs and facilities that form an important hub for information-technology R&D in the state of Nebraska:

The Abacus Distributed Storage Lab, aims to design and develop distributed and parallel storage sys tems with high scalability, performance, reliability and availability.

ANDES, Advanced Networking & Distributed Experimental Systems Lab fosters research in the following core areas: high-speed computer network architectures and protocols, networking support for multimedia services, distributed heterogeneous computing, and real-time systems and protocols.

The Constraint Systems Lab investigations cover both theoretic and practical aspects of Constraint Processing, a sub-area of Artificial Intelligence. Constraint Processing provides powerful tools for modeling and solving effectively a wide variety of combinatorial problems spanning over Computer Science, Engineering, and Management.

ESQuaReD, (read as e2), the laboratory for Empirically-based Software Quality Research and Development, performs fundamental research on methodologies and tools for creating sufficiently dependable software. The focus areas are: software verification and validation, program analysis, empirical software engineering, software modeling and design, and domain specific software engineering techniques.

For more information, see the source of this passage: http://cse.unl.edu/

Management Information Systems ProgramThe College of Business Administration offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees (MBA & PhD) in Management Information Systems (MIS). The MIS faculty members work on organizational, behavioral, as well as design science research. The faculty members are well published and known nationally and internationally for their accomplishments. The MIS program emphasizes the conceptual foundation of MIS, information systems analysis and design, design science, electronic business/mobile/ubiquitous commerce, virtual world, knowledge sharing and management, enterprise integration, business intelligence, and global/strategic IT management. The program offers a comprehensive set of courses which are being constantly enhanced and updated.

For more information, see the source of this passage: http://cba.unl.edu/academics/management/mis/

UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

11UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

Center for Applied Land Management Information Technology (CALMIT)The people and partners of CALMIT combine interdisciplinary expertise in advanced land management infor-mation technologies to conduct research and instruction of the highest quality in remote sensing, geographic information systems (GIS) and related technologies. CALMIT is an internationally recognized center of excel-lence for applications of geospatial technologies to issues in natural resources management.

For more information, see the source of this passage: http://www.calmit.unl.edu/

Holland Computing Center (HCC)HCC provides various services to researchers associated with any campus of the University of Nebraska system. Agreements are also in place with corporate and non-University researchers who share common interests or needs related to high performance computing resources. The HCC houses and manages a number of super-computers serving a broad range of functions. Firefly, a 21 TFlop supercomputer is used by scientists and engi-neers to study topics such as nanoscale chemistry, subatomic physics, meteorology, crashworthiness, and arti-ficial intelligence. Other resources with specific roles include Merritt for shared memory processing; Red for LHC grid computing, analysis of the CMS particle physics experiment and deployment on the open science grid; and PrairieFire a 256 processor supercomputer that enables advanced simulation to perform product analysis, design, development, testing and manufacturing in a virtual environment.

For more information, see the source of this passage: http://hcc.unl.edu/

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

12UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

University of Nebraska Technology Park (NUTP)The University of Nebraska Technology Park is a joint endeavor of the University of Nebraska, private sector investors and the University of Nebraska Foundation which was established in 1997. The mission of the NUTP is to enhance the transfer of technology from the University to the marketplace, foster interaction between tech-nology businesses and the University, nurture startup and emerging technology firms, and promote technology based economic development in Nebraska.

The NUTP provides the full spectrum of amenities and services for both new and established companies: a successful business incubator program in the Technology Development Center (OTP); office and lab space for lease at highly competitive rates within One Technology Place; and many building sites for additional multi-ten-ant buildings or stand-alone companies. NUTP allowable land used include: 1) laboratories and related facilities intended for basic and applied research, development of technology based products and services or testing of technology based products and services; 2) facilities intended for production or assembly of products of a technological nature, provided production is supported by on-site research or production development activi-ties; 3) pilot plants in which prototypes production process can be tested and used for assembly of products of a technology nature; 4) corporate, regional and divisional headquarters of technology based or knowledge driven companies or organizations; 5) technology dependent or computer based facilities dedicated to the processing of data or analysis of information, provided that theses information services are supported by on-site research or product development; or 6) any other facilities reasonably related to the intended mission of the technology park provided these users are consistent with the use permit approved by the University of Nebras-ka Technology Park LLC. The NUTP is home for numerous information and business service establishments includ-ing ALTS, Cabela’s Technology Center, Computer Services Inc., Dell/Perot Systems, Highway Bridge Services, and Specialized Network Systems.

The NUTP provides access to university resources, technology transfer assistance, research funding resources, professional office services, and high-speed data services. The business incubator program housed in the Technology Development Center (TDC) assists clients in launching new firms. The TDC nurtures start-up and emerging technologies, and helps foster spin-off companies from the University of Nebraska. The TDC tailors a program to fit each company’s individual circumstances. Business advisors are also available to assist with day-to-day operational issues. Between 1997 and 2006, the park helped launch 30 new companies, including 18 software firms, four engineering firms, four business services firms, three biotechnology firms and one nano-technology firm. Some of the more prominent firms that have graduated from the incubator program include: Covalent Technology, Dynamic Solutions, GeneSeek, GIS Workshop, i2rd, Ingenient Technologies, MetaLogic, Midwest MicroSystems, Pro-Solutions, Safety by Design, Specialized Network Systems, Technology As Promised, and Unident. NUTP also houses the One Technology Place (OTP) which serves as a multi-tenant facility designed to offer midsized companies and TDC graduates room to grow. OTP provides an advantageous location, technical support, redundant fiber optic telecommunications service, an on-site OC -12 Sonet Node, fiber optic interconnectivity of park buildings, an on-site co-location facility for mission critical data storage, a “smart” auditorium available for internet based training, video-conferencing, access to University of Nebraska facilities and a student internship program.

For more information, check the source of this passage: http://www.nutechpark.com/

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

13UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

Nebraska Innovation Campus (NIC)The NIC is a unique collaboration between the University Nebraska at Lincoln, and State of Nebraska to de-velop a state-of-the-art innovation and research campus that will produce substantial new public and private investment and a significant number of new high-quality jobs for the state and local economy. In particular the NIC will allow UNL to expand its research capabilities, while improving commercialization of its discoveries.

The NIC is strategically located with excellent access to an interstate, highway, rail service, and two regional airports. The NIC will take advantage of special legislative measures that have created a progressive, pro-business tax climate. The NIC will offer a central location for UNL research. The NIC will serve the dual purpose of providing a flexible space that will house and expand the research of these existing facilities, while promoting interdisciplinary projects.

The NIC will have a central conferencing facility well suited for both small and large group meetings and seminars. The facility will include a business incubator, of approximately 20,000 square feet, until larger facilities are constructed on the Campus. This initial-stage business incubator will eventually become the central busi-ness development center of the NIC. The NIC will eventually house a state-of-the art business incubation facil-ity, the Innovation Center, that will be in the range of 40,000 to 45,000 square feet, include flexible wet and dry laboratories, a clean room and high-bay demonstration space. The Innovation Center will also serve to expand the entrepreneurship and internship programs that are already thriving at UNL— achieved through substantial integration between the NIC and the exceptional education and research programs at UNL.

For more information, see the source of this passage: http://innovate.unl.edu/

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

14UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

Business Services

Continuum Incwww.4continuum.comLocal employment: 10-19

Dell Perot Systems Corporationwww.perotsystems.comLocal employment: 500-999

Fiservwww.fiserv.comLocal employment: 500-999

Kenexawww.kenexa.comLocal employment: 250-499

Leadership Resourceswww.lrsuccess.comLocal employment: 5-9

Talent Plus Incwww.talentplus.comLocal employment: 120

Sandhills Publishingwww.sandhills.comLocal employment: 250-499

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICES AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SECTOR

Lincoln’s Business Services and Information Technology sectors comprise a broad range of companies including major establishments such as Allied Insurance, Ameritas, Assurity Life Insurance, Fiserv, Dell Perot Systems, Sandhills Publishing, and State Farm Insurance. Many of these establishments are listed below in order to provide a sense of the breadth of the industry in Lincoln.

Insurance CarriersAllied Insurancewww.alliedinsurance.comLocal employment: 250-499

Ameritaswww.ameritas.comLocal employment: 1000-1999

Allied Insurancewww.alliedinsurance.comLocal employment: 250-499

State Farm Insurancewww.statefarm.comLocal employment: 1000-1999

Data Processing & Software Development5q Communications, Incwww.5qcommunications.comLocal employment: 10-19

Cepter Enterprises Llcwww.cepter.comLocal employment: 1-4

Healthcare Data Solutionswww.healthcaredatasolutions.comLocal employment: 10-19

New Digital Group, Incwww.davidhahn.comLocal employment: 1-4

15UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

Computer Integrated Systems Design & Networking

Adaptive Process Technologieswww.adaptiveprocesstechnology.comLocal employment: 1-4

All Needs Computer Consulting Service, Incwww.anccs.comLocal employment: 5-9

Alterium Internet Applications Incwww.alterium.comLocal employment: 1-4

Business Media, Incwww.bmiav.comLocal employment: 10-19

Computing Extras Incwww.computingextras.comLocal employment: 5-9

Isoft Data Systems Incwww.Isoftdata.comLocal employment: 10-19

Mesa CorpLocal employment: 10-19www.Mesacorp.com

Sterling Digital Networkswww.sterlingdigitalnetworks.comLocal employment: 1-4

Computer Software Development & Custom Programming Services

A B Consulting Companywww.abconsultingcompany.comLocal employment: 1-4

Agile Sports Technologies, Incwww.agilesportstech.comLocal employment: 10-19

Alderson Consulting Group Incwww.aldersonconsultinggroup.comLocal employment: 1-4

Alexander Open Systemswww.aos5.comLocal employment: 5-9

Automated Systems Incwww.asiweb.comLocal employment: 50-99

Centrix Solutions Incwww.centrixsolutions.comLocal employment: 5-9

Codercraft Incwww.codercraft.comLocal employment: 1-4

Creative Thinking Corpwww.creativethinkinginc.comLocal employment: 20-49

Digitec Inc.www.digitecinc.comLocal employment: 10-19

Digitech Systems, Incwww.dsiflow.comLocal employment: 10-19

Dns Durham, Llcwww.dnsdurham.comLocal employment: 1-4

Dorsey Technologies Llcwww.dorseytechnologies.comLocal employment: 1-4

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER

15 16UNL Bureau of Business Research Report prepared for the Lincoln Partnership for Economic Development

Drec Enterpriseswww.drecsoftware.comLocal employment: 1-4

Global Brilliancewww.globalbrilliance.comLocal employment: 1-4

Hyland Software Incwww.onbase.comLocal employment: 10-19

Information Analytics Incwww.4w.comLocal employment: 10-19

Ingenient Technologies, Incwww.ingenient.comLocal employment: 5-9

Innovation Corpwww.innovationcorp.comLocal employment: 1-4

Interactive Info Researchwww.i2rd.comLocal employment: 10-19

Intralot, Incwww.intralot.comLocal employment: 20-49

J D Business Solutionswww.jdbsi.comLocal employment: 5-9

Masterchain Development, Incwww.weneedit.netLocal employment: 10-19

Micro Images Incwww.microimages.comLocal employment: 20-49

Midwest Microsystems Llcwww.midwestmicro.comLocal employment: 1-4

Naturewarewww.natureware.comLocal employment: 1-4

Nanonation Net Incwww.nanonation.netLocal employment: 20-49

Nebraska Electronic Transfer Systems Incwww.netseft.comLocal employment: 20-49

Pen-Link, Ltdwww.penlink.comLocal employment: 10-19

Seemesellitwww.seemesellit.comLocal employment: 1-4

Salt Creek Software Incwww.saltcreek.comLocal employment: 1-4

Tailored Software Svc Incwww.tssi.comLocal employment: 1-4

Tech Fabric Presencewww.techfabricpresence.comLocal employment: 50-99

Tech Soft Solutions Llcwww.techsoftsol.comLocal employment: 1-4

The Ganzel Group Communications Incwww.ganzelgroup.comLocal employment: 1-4

Vallis Software, Incwww.vallis.comLocal employment: 1-4

Web MD Mac Healthwww.mmmachealth.comLocal employment: 50-99

A PROFILE OF LINCOLN’S BUSINESS SERVICE & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER